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Related: About this forumOctober jobs report expected to show slowing growth amid hurricane aftermath, Boeing strike
October jobs report expected to show slowing growth amid hurricane aftermath, Boeing strike
Josh Schafer · Reporter
Thu, October 31, 2024 at 1:54 PM EDT 3 min read
The October jobs report is expected to show job gains slowed significantly during the month as recent hurricanes and a strike by Boeing workers weigh on the labor market.
The monthly report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, slated for release at 8:30 a.m. ET on Friday, is expected to show nonfarm payrolls rose by 105,000 in October while the unemployment rate held flat at 4.1%, according to consensus estimates compiled by Bloomberg. This would mark the lowest monthly number of job additions since December 2020. ... In September, the US economy shocked Wall Street by adding 254,000 jobs, well above consensus estimates. The unemployment rate declined to 4.1%.
Here are the key numbers Wall Street will be looking at on Friday morning compared to the previous month, according to data from Bloomberg:
Nonfarm payrolls: +105,000 vs. +254,000 previously
Unemployment rate: 4.1% vs. 4.1% previously
Average hourly earnings, month over month: +0.3% vs. +0.4% previously
Average hourly earnings, year over year: +4.0% vs. +4.0% previously
Average weekly hours worked: 34.2 vs. 34.2 previously
Hurricane Milton made landfall in Florida on Oct. 9 during the survey week for the October jobs report, which "probably weighed on payrolls across the board, especially in leisure & hospitality," Bank of America US economist Shruti Mishra wrote in a note to clients.
Overall, Shruti's team believes the hurricanes and a strike at Boeing will lower payrolls by at least 50,000. Given that, Shruti argued a reading of around 100,000 job additions would still be a "solid print."
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mahatmakanejeeves
(61,298 posts)Yahoo Finance
October jobs report: US economy adds just 12,000 jobs as Boeing strike, hurricanes weigh on labor market
Josh Schafer · Reporter
Updated Fri, November 1, 2024 at 10:22 AM EDT 3 min read
The US labor market added far fewer jobs than expected in October as weather disruptions and worker strikes weighed on the labor market.
Data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics released Friday showed the labor market added 12,000 payrolls in October, less than the 100,000 expected by economists.
Meanwhile, the unemployment rate held steady at 4.1%, partly due to a difference in how the BLS collects data for that metric versus monthly job additions. Workers who were employed but earned no money wouldn't be counted as unemployed in the household survey, which is where the unemployment rate comes from. They would not be considered employed in the payroll survey, which is how job additions are tabulated.
October job additions came in far lower than the revised 223,000 added in September. Monthly job additions for August and September were also revised lower by a combined 112,000.
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